Film Kids That Give Us the Creeps

Connecticut parent-shoppers (Vera Farmiga and Peter Sarsgaard) pick 9-year-old Esther (Isabelle Fuhrman) — who paints pretty pictures, dresses like Little Bo Peep (meets Wednesday Addams) and has mysterious ribbons around her neck and wrists that can’t be removed under any circumstances — as a replacement kid for their miscarried one in “Orphan.” (Read The Post’s review of “Orphan” here
).

He may look innocent, but the mind of 12-year-old Henry (Macaulay Culkin) belongs to that of a sociopath in “The Good Son” — he drowned his 3-year-old brother in the bathtub and attempts to kill his whole family, including his (actually) good cousin Mark (Elijah Wood).

We’re not sure which is more creepy: ESP child Danny Torrance (Danny Lloyd), known for his possessed chanting of “Redrum” (Murder spelled backwards), or the Grady twins that haunt the Overlook Hotel in “The Shining.”

Linda Blair’s portrayal of “The Exorcist’s” demonic, head-spinning twelve-year-old Regan MacNeil was so terrifying that the actress had trouble landing roles after the movie.

The pigtail-wearing and proper Rhoda Penmark (Patty McCormack) didn’t like losing a penmanship medal to her schoolmate – so she killed him. “The Bad Seed” also killed her neighbor and burned her school janitor alive.

The cultish “Children of the Corn” believe that the only way to ensure a successful corn harvest is to murder all adults who pass through town.

Despite their good intentions, both ghost-seer Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment) and ghost Kyra Collins (Mischa Barton) prove to be the scarier than any of the many demons that inhabit “The Sixth Sense.”

Manipulative child vampire Claudia (Kirsten Dunst) hides the corpse of a woman she so longs to grow into (and can’t accept that she never will) among her doll collection in “Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles.”

Loner Aidan Keller (David Dorfman) shares a bond with the evil spirit of 12-year-old Samara (Daveigh Chase), who uses her power of “projected thermography” (burning images into the mind of other living beings via recording media) on the boy in “The Ring.”

Little Emily (Dakota Fanning), who’s split personality prevents her from identifying right from wrong, controls the puppet strings in “Hide and Seek.”

HIV-positive teen Telly (Leo Fitzpatrick) smooth talks virgins into having unprotected sex with him in “Kids.”

After a voyeuristic observation, 13-year-old Briony Tallis (Saoirse Ronan) jumps to a rash conclusion, setting a fate-altering plan in motion for older sister (Keira Knightley) and her lover (James McAvoy).

Everyone must play nice with 6-year-old mind reader Anthony Fremont (Billy Mumy) in “The Twilight Zone” — when angered, he can banish people away to a cornfields or morph them into a walking zombies with one, simple thought.

When Gage Creed (Miko Hughes) is run over by a truck, his father resurrects him by burying him in an ancient burial ground in “Pet Sematary.” Gage returns as an adult-speaking, demonic version of his former self and kills his mother.